This document provides information about different types of energy sources including renewable, nonrenewable, solar, and fossil fuels. It discusses that renewable energy sources like solar and wind can be naturally replenished, while nonrenewable sources like coal are finite. Solar energy can be harnessed using technologies like solar heaters, cells, and power plants. Fossil fuels like crude oil, natural gas, and coal are formed from remains of dead plants and animals but have downsides like being a finite resource and greenhouse gas emitters. The document lists some of India's major solar parks and locations of oil fields and coal mines.
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Energy
1. ORIENTAL COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY
BHOPAL (M.P
.)
SUBMITTED TO : SUBMITTED BY :
PROF. KIRAN GUPTA UtKarsh Gangwar
0126cs161117
CSE-D, IV SEMESTER
Energy, Environment, Ecology
& Society
3. What is energy?
It have many meanings in many
fields like in physics,
economics and normal basis.
In physics, it can never be
created and nor be destroyed.
In economics, it is harnessing
and scale of energy itself.
In ordinary language, it is
acting or speaking in a
vigorous way.
4.
5. RENEWABLE/GREEN
ENERGY
• Collected from renewable
resources, which are naturally
replenished on a human
timescale.
• It can be used repeatedly
and replaced naturally.
• Examples include, solar
energy, wind energy,
biomass, etc.
7. Why?
What is it?
It is the energy that is in
sunlight.
Used today in a number of ways.
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10. Solar Plants in India
Installations by region
Top 05:
Dhirubhai Ambani Solar Park, Rajasthan
Welspun Solar MP Project, Madhya Pradesh
Charanka Solar Park, Gujarat
Bhadla Solar Park, Rajasthan
Kamuthi Solar Power Project, Tamil Nadu
11. NONRENEWABLE
RESOURCES
• Cannot be readily replaced
by natural means on a level
equal to its consumption.
• Not sustainable.
• Abundant and affordable.
• Examples include, coal, fossil
fuels, nuclear energy, etc.
13. What is it?
They are hydrocarbons formed from the
remains of dead plants and animals.
These are sometimes also
known instead as mineral
fuels.
Examples are:
I. Crude oil.
II. Natural gas.
III. Coal.
15. Pros and Cons
CONS
Finite resource
Large greenhouse gas emitter including CO2
Progressively harder to find oil and gas deposits
Global movement toward limiting oil and gas and
using renewable energy sources
Environmentally damaging, with potential
catastrophic damage from large oil spills
Produces smog which harms human health
PROS
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16. Oil Rigs and Coal Mines India
Oil
On-shore Oil-fields in North-Eastern
India.
In Assam there are Digboi (oldest field,
1866), Naharkatiya, Moran, Rudrasagar,
Galeki, Hugrijan, Angui and Lakwa fields.
On-shore Oil-fields in Western India.
Barkol, Dholaka, Mehsana, Kadi,
Ahmedabad and Sanand fields.
Coal
Jharia Jharkhand
Bokaro Jharkhand
Godda Jharkhand
Raniganj Coalfield West Bengal